---- BRAMPTON'S COIN & BULLION SPECIALISTS

Sell Gold Bars With the Details Checked First

Gold bars have actual worth, but the proper review relies on the specifics. Before you make your decision, at our Brampton shop, we assess the weight, purity, refinery, serial number, assay, condition and current gold market value. If you decide to sell, we offer you a fair price according to the gold confirmed amount and the current market conditions.

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15+

Year serving GTA collectors

5*

Google rating from local buyers and sellers

1000S

Coins and bullion pieces sold

GTA

Serving Brampton, Toronto, Mississauga & beyond

Live Gold Pricing

Offers based on current spot price, not yesterday’s rate

Assay Card Matters

Sealed packaging and serial numbers support a cleaner offer

All Brands Reviewed

RCM, PAMP, TD, and other recognized refineries welcomed

Weight Verified Here

We confirm weight and purity before any offer is made

Recent Purchases From Local Sellers

Many gold bars we review come from real local situations a sealed bar kept in a Brampton safety deposit box, a PAMP bar bought years ago as a small investment, gold bullion passed down through family, or bank-issued bars brought in from sellers visiting us from Toronto, Mississauga, and across the GTA.

RECENTLY BOUGHT

Silver Coin Group

Reviewed by silver content, year, condition, and demand.

RECENTLY BOUGHT

Gold Bullion Bar

Reviewed by weight, purity, brand, and market value

RECENTLY BOUGHT

Old Canadian Bills

Reviewed by condition, year, and collector interest

RECENTLY BOUGHT

Vintage Silver Bar

Reviewed by silver weight, brand, packaging, and demand

What Does It Mean to Sell a Gold Bar?

Gold bars’ prime value is derived from the weight and purity of the gold they contain, minus the current gold spot price. But there are a few other things that are worth considering when you take a bar to the review.

A bar of gold that is sealed with a gold bar assay card and certificate from a recognized refinery is not a loose bar that lacks an assay card and certificate from a recognized gold refinery. It can be a simple process depending on the type of refinery, serial number, packaging and condition of the refinery.

We can educate you about the type of gold bar you have and how that affects you before making any decisions.

Types of Gold Bars We Review

Royal Canadian Mint Gold Bars

RCM gold bars are checked by weight, purity, serial number, assay card, packaging, and market recognition in Canada.

PAMP Suisse Gold Bars

PAMP Suisse bars are reviewed for refinery details, assay card, packaging condition, serial number, and current gold value.

Bank-Issued Gold Bars

TD, BMO, and other bank-issued bars are checked by weight, purity, markings, receipts, packaging, and condition.

Loose or Recognized Gold Bars

Loose bars and recognized refinery bars, including Perth Mint, Valcambi, Argor-Heraeus, and similar bullion, can be reviewed.

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4.8
Based on 469 reviews
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Kenny Animasahun profile picture
Kenny Animasahun
4 months ago
Ashish Kumar profile picture
Ashish Kumar
4 months ago
ARSHVEER KAUR profile picture
ARSHVEER KAUR
4 months ago
SUKHMAN SAHOTA profile picture
SUKHMAN SAHOTA
4 months ago
Suresh Kumar profile picture
Suresh Kumar
4 months ago
Rahul Chawla profile picture
Rahul Chawla
6 months ago
Pretty scummy experience and shady tactics. If you’re going to advertise “$12 over spot,” then honor it (check your ads)— because that premium is already ridiculous. On Jan 30, 2026, the price should’ve been around $124 per Silver Maple, yet when I called the store I was quoted $149.

This looks like you’re trying to offload inventory using higher past prices, while you have no problem jacking prices up immediately when spot goes up and it benefits you. Either price it transparently or stop advertising “over spot” like it means something.
KT profile picture
KT
6 months ago
This was easily one of the worst coin shop experiences I’ve had. I asked specifically for bullion silver coins and was shown a beaten up Maple coin priced at spot + $20, which is far above normal market pricing. When I pointed out that I can purchase similar silver from my bank at spot + $8, I was told that bank silver is “used,” a claim that does not align with my experience or common understanding.

Every item I looked at carried an excessive premium, including junk silver dollars. Pricing felt misleading and completely out of line with other reputable dealers.

Given this experience, the high overall rating is difficult to understand. I would strongly advise anyone looking for fair, competitive silver pricing to shop elsewhere.
Shaun Smith profile picture
Shaun Smith
6 months ago
Went in today with my 6 year old son he bought his first silver maple. Staff was super friendly even the security was welcoming as soon as you enter. I brought in collectible coins for them to look at for me. They took their time to explain everything to me. Definitely worth the drive from Georgetown.
Paul profile picture
Paul
8 months ago
Absolutely outstanding service. Fair prices, great selection, and genuine expertise in coins, bullion, and collectibles. Every visit feels comfortable and honest, with clear communication and no pressure. Highly recommended for anyone looking to buy, sell, or get knowledgeable guidance in the precious metals space.
Hasin Shadab profile picture
Hasin Shadab
10 months ago
I recently visited Bw Coins and had a fantastic experience. The store offers a great selection of coins and collectibles, with something for both serious collectors and casual enthusiasts. The staff were knowledgeable, patient, and happy to answer all my questions. I really appreciated the fair pricing and the quality of the items available.
Whether you're new to coin collecting or a seasoned pro, I highly recommend checking out Bw Coins. I’ll definitely be coming back!

How Our Gold Bar Review Works

STEP 01

Bring the Bar As It Is

Keep the bar in its original assay card, blister pack, or protective sleeve if it has one. Bring any certificate, receipt, original box, or bank documentation that came with it.

STEP 02

We Check the Details

We review the weight, purity, refinery markings, serial number, and overall condition. For sealed bars, we also check the packaging and assay card condition.

STEP 03

We Review Market Value

We look at current gold market pricing, confirmed gold content, refinery recognition, packaging condition, and any factors that may affect the offer.

STEP 04

You Decide What Comes Next

After the review, we can make a fair offer if you want to sell. You can also compare your options, keep the bar, or bring in additional bars or related items for review.

Ready When You Are

Have a gold bar with its original assay card?

Visit our Brampton shop, or reach out first if you'd like to know what to expect.

What Affects the Value of a Gold Bar?

Gold bars are usually simpler to review than coins, but details still matter. Weight and purity are the starting point, while the refinery name, assay packaging, serial number, condition, and current gold market can all help with identification and review.

Value Factor

Why It Matters

What to Bring

Weight and Purity

These tell us how much gold is in the bar and are the main starting point for review.

Bring the bar as it is. Weight and purity are often stamped on the bar or packaging.

Refinery or Brand

Recognized names like Royal Canadian Mint, PAMP Suisse, TD, BMO, and other trusted refiners can help with identification.

Keep the assay card, certificate, receipt, or original packaging with the bar.

Assay Packaging

Sealed packaging can help confirm details. Opened, bent, or damaged cards may need a closer look.

Do not open sealed blister packs, assay cards, or protective sleeves before visiting us.

Serial Number

A serial number can connect the bar to its assay card, receipt, or original purchase record.

Bring any bank paperwork, receipt, certificate, or record connected to the bar.

Current Gold Market

Gold pricing changes daily, so the market at the time of review matters.

We review gold bars using current market factors when you bring them in.

Value Factor

Gold weight and purity

Why It Matters

This helps us understand the gold content of the coin.

What to Bring or Check

Bring the coin as-is, especially if weight or purity is shown on the holder, box, or certificate.

Value Factor

Date and mint

Why It Matters

Some years, mints, countries, or issue types may be more interesting to collectors.

What to Bring or Check

Keep the coin in its original holder if the label shows the date, mint, or issue details.

Value Factor

Condition

Why It Matters

Wear, scratches, cleaning, handling, and surface marks can affect collector interest.

What to Bring or Check

Do not clean, polish, wipe, or rub the coin before bringing it in.

Value Factor

Packaging and certificates

Why It Matters

Original boxes, capsules, receipts, and certificates can help identify the coin and support trust.

What to Bring or Check

Bring all packaging and paperwork, even if it looks old or worn.

Value Factor

Collector demand

Why It Matters

Some gold coins may be worth more than gold content because collectors want that specific coin.

What to Bring or Check

Bring matching coins, sets, or related items together if you have them.

Value Factor

Coin type

Why It Matters

Bullion, collectible, graded, and commemorative gold coins may be reviewed differently.

What to Bring or Check

Tell us if the coin came from a set, gift box, collection, or family estate.

What to Bring With Your Gold Bar:

Understand Your Gold Bar Before You Sell

A gold bar that is sealed and has an assay card will not be reviewed in the same manner as a loose bar with no cards. Weight, purity is most important, but also the name of the refinery, serial number, packaging, condition and current gold prices can impact the review.

We will tell you what factors can impact the worth of your gold bar so you can know what to anticipate prior to selling. We inspect the bar thoroughly, and give a fair opinion on gold content, market pricing, and general condition.

Other Items You May Want to Review

Silver bars are usually reviewed by weight, purity, brand, size, packaging, and whether the bar is bullion, vintage, or collectible.

Gold coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If your group includes Canadian gold coins, world gold coins, Royal Canadian Mint pieces, commemorative coins, or bullion gold coins, we can review them separately from silver coins.

If your collection also includes diamond rings, loose diamonds, jewellery with diamonds, certificates, receipts, or inherited diamond pieces, we can review those items separately from coins and bullion.

Silver coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If you have Silver Maple Leafs, Canadian silver dollars, older silver coins, 1 oz silver coins, or mixed silver coin groups, we review them separately from gold coins.

Paper money and banknotes have different value factors, including issue year, denomination, condition, serial number, grading, rarity, and collector demand.

Old Canadian bills may carry face value, collector value, or both. If you have older $1, $2, $25, $500, or $1,000 Canadian bills, we help you understand what may affect value before you redeem or sell them.

Gold coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If your group includes Canadian gold coins, world gold coins, Royal Canadian Mint pieces, commemorative coins, or bullion gold coins, we can review them separately from silver coins.

Silver bars are usually reviewed by weight, purity, brand, size, packaging, and whether the bar is bullion, vintage, or collectible.

Old Canadian bills may carry face value, collector value, or both. If you have older $1, $2, $25, $500, or $1,000 Canadian bills, this page explains what to check before redeeming or selling them.

Silver bars are usually reviewed by weight, purity, brand, size, packaging, and whether the bar is bullion, vintage, or collectible.

Silver coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If you have Silver Maple Leafs, Canadian silver dollars, older silver coins, 1 oz silver coins, or mixed silver coin groups, we review them separately from gold coins.

Paper money and banknotes have different value factors, including issue year, denomination, condition, serial number, grading, rarity, and collector demand.

FAQs

Where can I sell gold bars?
Bring your gold bars to our Brampton shop. We review weight, purity, refinery, packaging, and current market pricing before you make any decision. We also serve sellers from Toronto, Mississauga, and across Canada.
Should I open the assay card before selling?
No. Keep the bar in its original sealed assay packaging. An opened or damaged assay card can affect the premium a recognized refinery bar commands. Bring it sealed.
Can I sell a gold bar without the original certificate or receipt?
Yes. We can still review a gold bar without documentation, though the process may involve additional verification. Bring whatever you have, bar, packaging, receipt, or nothing at all.
Are gold bars worth more than gold coins?
Gold bars and gold coins are both priced primarily on gold content, but each has different factors that may add or reduce value. We review both types and can help you understand the difference if you have both.
Do you buy larger gold bars like 100g or 1 kg?
Yes. We review gold bars of all common sizes. If you have a larger bar, contact us in advance so we can prepare for the review.

Ready to Review Your Gold Bar?

A gold bar is not something most people sell often, so it is normal to want the details checked first. Bring the bar to our Brampton shop with any assay card, packaging, receipt, certificate, or bank paperwork you still have. We will check the weight, purity, refinery, serial number, packaging, and current gold market value. If you decide to sell, we give a fair price based on the verified details and current gold value.

Trust your gold with confidence, expert verification, honest answers, and fair value you can count on before you decide. 

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